Voices of the Flood

Voices of the Flood

Andrea Oke, Josie Ashe, Laurence Hawker and Jonathon King

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The exhibition will draw together a number of themes running throughout the Land of the Summer People project; it aims to provide a space that informs and encourages dialog on the connectivity of the landscape (social and hydrological), drivers for change, and our response to recent and historic flooding.

The exhibited work will include audio from interviews with local residents, which combine with sound bites from interviews with politicians, scientists and government organisations as they attempt to resolve the flooding on the levels. The audio installation is intended to stimulate the listener into a personal response to the flooding of the Somerset levels, whether social or scientific.

The audience is directed towards the large-scale image of a landscape, representative of the hydrological catchment combined with visual representations of data derived from the flooding. We would like to encourage interaction with the image by asking the audience to write or draw messages on the paper provided before attaching these thoughts to the surface of the large-scale image. It is our hope that the audience will help us to cover the landscape with their thoughts, feelings and responses to flooding.

The material generated through this dialog will be incorporated into a unique hand printed book; bound within a print of the Levels landscape and containing all of the messages gathered from the large scale image. By looking at the key words, messages and questions rained through this process, further research will be undertaken to produce accessible and engaging visual representations of the scientific data collected. These will be used to help us understand how people are responding to flooding, the links across landscape we live in, and how our interactions with this landscape affect the way it works.

Somerset Flood Kit,

Somerset Flood Kit

Seila Fernández Arconada, Barney Dobson, Ioanna Stamataki and Ludovica Beltrame.

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The Somerset Flood Kit is a package containing items related to the Somerset Levels and Moors and its relationship with flooding. This work connects art and engineering by looking at how questions and solutions can work together to find creative ways of representation and communication. The Somerset Flood Kit is a package containing the products we created from a multidisciplinary approach and process. The items of the package are made from materials and symbols of flooding in the Somerset Moors and Levels. These include a boat made from clay collected in Somerset rivers, a willow cutting from Sedgemoor, a natural sea sponge, an inflatable artefact made of recycled plastic carrier bags, rice, gravel and sand from Ebbor Gorge near Cheddar and a recycled plastic bottle to create a mini water filter. These items are connected to a booklet where stories are presented in different writing styles such as poetry, drawings, newspaper articles, games, academic text, etc. By using different language formats we play with an open narrative full of questions while presenting connections with the past and the future of Somerset. These kits were generated with the intention of giving them away in Somerset to generate a flood conversation. The performance took place in Taunton on Tuesday 17th of March 2015. The group formed by Seila Fernández Arconada, Barney Dobson, Ioanna Stamataki and Ludovica Beltrame met in the city centre. During an afternoon we had a number of conversations that were triggered by the Somerset Flood Kit. We found that studying the physical processes of flooding and the topography of the area does not make you aware of the effects of flooding at the local community level or of their experiences. We were surprised that most of the people we met and talk to had directly encountered flooding (either recently or in the past) or knew someone who had. Our contribution with the Somerset Flood Kit made a little step forward in other creative ways to communicate and engage with a different audience in an exchange of learning from different perspectives about floods.

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FLOOD CHROMATOGRAPHY

FLOOD CHROMATOGRAPHY

COOKE – GLOVER – WEBBER – WESTMANCOAT

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“‘Something emotive abides in the land, and…it can be recognised and evoked even if it cannot be thoroughly plumbed’. This ‘something’ is inaccessible to the analytic researcher, and invisible to the ironist”. (‘Landmarks’, Robert Macfarlane, commenting on the work of Barry Lopez)

Art and Science in the Landscape

This series of site specific work was made on 02/03/15 at The Willows and Wetland Centre in Stoke St Gregory on The Somerset Levels and is a direct response to learning more about how this particular area was affected by recent flooding. Part of our research involved speaking with staff at the Centre and understanding how the floods were perceived by residents and how that informed local discussion surrounding potential land management, including the possible benefits of more willow beds and vegetation. Informed by James Webber’s initial ideas, the group collected materials from the ground, along with withy sticks and water from the River Tone, and constructed three dimensional environments on paper to represent various flooding scenarios. We added writing ink to the collected waters, and this was rained or tidally flooded into the various topographies and allowed to wander at will…to ‘write’ the story of how water reacts in different situations.

The making of the work led to some interesting observations and discussion between the group. Dave Glover said that seeing the works form helped to reinforce his understanding that “…you can’t apply the same solution to the same problem in every area. You need careful land management in the Somerset Levels.” Olivia Cooke felt that the project made clear to her that “Having previously carried out research on communication of hazards and risk, this project highlighted a different method of communicating scientific information through art. It is just as important to be good at communicating science as it is to be a good scientist..”.

Later, reflecting on our day of making flood art in the landscape, Dave wrote:”It was great to get out from behind the computer screen and to actively model some ‘flood scenarios’. Some were interesting to compare; the chromatography showed where the water ‘pooled’. If you have ever watched how water runs down a window; you will have seen how droplets will merge or follow similar paths.

This was something that was visible today in the artwork which you would not necessarily see that detail in a computer model. One important aspect to note is the speed at which these observations take place; in a river channel erosion may take place over days or even months.

Flood Warnings

Flood Warnings

Seila Fernández Arconada, Barney Dobson, Ioanna Stamataki and Ludovica Beltrame.

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Flood Warnings are attempts of communicating flood risk. It is connected with nature and our relationship with it. This work comes out of a collaboration in which communication between different disciplines is vital. What is the relationship between the current societies and their environment? How are we dealing with climate change?

This collaboration’s starting point was looking at the future of flooding in the Somerset Levels and Moors. From the beginning we were inspired by the Tsunami Warnings made in Japan. Those warnings are written engravings in huge stones. They are attempts to communicate to the future for next generations telling them not to live in tsunami-affected areas.

Flood Warnings are a reflection in how communication between different organisations and individuals is happening in present times. How does the battle between short-term human interests clash with nature at different time scales? Could examining this question be applied to Somerset and its historical connection to water? Is current society learning from the past and its mistakes? Are human beings acting as good stewards for future generations to come?

The work consists of 4 stones that have been placed in Moorland as a compass from the centre of this area: 51°5’3.91″N, 2°56’54.52″W. This village gained nationwide recognition in February 2014 due to extensive flooding which particularly affected this area. The four stones are currently located in the area as an intervention in public space. They have an engraved message: TXT “HI” 2: 07860053076. This invitation for communication is a temporary autoreply service in which the audience, who could unexpectedly encounter the stones, will have the chance to communicate. Will they be curious about the message and text with their mobile phones looking for an answer?

Technology, which has an important impact in the aforementioned, also represents the rapid times we are living in, it changes, decays and develops. Meanwhile engraving drawings or writing in stone, an ancient technique to preserve human knowledge, was the first attempt of humankind to represent and preserve experiences in time.

‘Parish Notices’

‘Parish Notices’

Jon England, Nejc Čož & Wouter Knoben

 

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‘Parish Notices’ consists of a pair of artworks each created in former parish notice boards. The works respond to two of the most dramatic events in the history of the Somerset levels, separated by over 400 years, the 1607 tsunami and the floods of 2014.

The works are simultaneously characterised by a series of commonalities and oppositions, representing the contrasts between these historic and contemporary events but also their cyclical and repeating nature.

The first work portrays a section of an engraving depicting the 1607 flood, reproduced in rusty pins and nails. The combination of image and materials (including historic square, cut nails) expresses both the single event, the accumulated histories communicated through this receptacle and repeated attempts to engineer a solution to the problem.

The second piece takes the form of a QR code (linking to the Land of the Summer People website) constructed from shiny, galvanised nuts and bolts. Its pixelated form contrast the pictorial form of its companion piece reflecting both the mediated experience of recent events and renewed efforts to engineer solutions to issues of flooding.

In using the notice boards as our canvases we reflect how regardless of the date of flooding events, the effect on local individuals and communities remains profound and that within the Somerset Levels the relationship between society, water and place is continually evolving and always complex.

However the process of creating these models allowed us to appreciate these processes in minutes. It was a very useful teaching tool which is a fair reflection of the purpose of the project; to communicate science visually. After talking to Nicola (one of the staff members at the Centre) it left me with the impression that there will not be a concurrent solution, such as dredging. She stated that although the last years flood actually damaged very little Willow, it did prevent its harvesting which was a problem specific to themselves. Obviously this links back into the discussion of better land use management. Do we flood a small town or do we flood an area of willow and compensate the owners?”.

The group would like to thank Nicola and the staff at the Willows and Wetlands Centre, Stoke St Gregory, for their support.